Taxus brevifolia
Taxus brevifolia is the native Pacific yew, a slow-growing evergreen conifer considered scarce in the wild.

Taxus brevifolia, known as the Pacific or western yew, is native along the Pacific coast though it is often considered uncommon. It is a small evergreen conifer growing very slowly up to 33 to 50 feet tall with a trunk diameter of 20 inches. It is shade tolerant but can also grow in the sun. It has thin, scaly bark that can be quite beautiful with red to purplish-brown tones. The leaves are short, lance-shaped, flat and dark green arranged spirally on the stem. Female yews produce a bright red, berry-like gelatinous cup called an aril that is wide and open at the end containing a single, highly poisonous seed. Most parts of the tree are very poisonous to humans and mammals. Birds eat the aril containing the seed which is then dispersed in their droppings. The male cones are small and spherical and shed their pollen in early spring. Used by First Nations people in the making of tools, bows and carvings. Pacific yew can have an irregular, often twisted form, offering beauty and character in the landscape as a specimen. It is a larval host plant for various moth species.
Common Name: Pacific Yew
Family: Taxaceae (The Yew Family)
Zone Hardiness: 4-9
Light: Full Sun, Part Shade, Full Shade
Height: 40' and over
Width:
Primary Bloom Colour: Green
Secondary Bloom Colour: Yellow
Bloom Time: Spring
Foliage Colour: Green
Class: Evergreen
Type: Shrub
Soil Moisture: Average, Moist
Stem Colour:
Fragrance: No
Berries: Red
Benefits: Butterflies
Deer Resistant: No
BC Native: Yes
Native Habitat: Mostly in the Pacific Coast Range in stream-side habitats and on moist to mesic slopes and ridge tops from sea level to 1,400 metres elevation from the southern end of the Alaska Panhandle to northern California with a disjunct population in southeastern BC into Idaho.
Award:
Geographical Origin: North America